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Fordham Law School FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History Faculty Scholarship 2015 Judge Jack Weinstein and the Allure of Antiproceduralism Howard M. Erichson Fordham University School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at:http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/faculty_scholarship Part of theJudges Commons, and theJurisprudence Commons Recommended Citation Howard M. Erichson,Judge Jack Weinstein and the Allure of Antiproceduralism, 64DePaul L. Rev.393 (2015) Available at: http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/faculty_scholarship/565 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History. For more information, please [email protected]. JUDGE JACK WEINSTEIN AND THE ALLURE OF ANTIPROCEDURALISM Howard M. Erichson* INTRODUCTION In one sense of the word “proceduralist”—a person with expertise in procedure—Jack Weinstein is among the leading proceduralists on the bench. Judge Weinstein taught civil procedure for years at Colum- bia Law School1 and co-authored a civil procedure textbook as well as a manual on New York civil procedure.2 His opinions reflect a depth of knowledge and a comfort with complex procedural issues that is uncommon among judges. But in another sense of the word proceduralist—an adherent of proceduralism, or faithfulness to estab- lished procedures—Jack Weinstein surely falls at the other end of the spectrum.3 As Judge Weinstein has put it himself, he plays “fast and loose with a lot of procedure.”4 In his long career as a federal judge in the Eastern District of New York, he has forged paths to bypass pre- vailing interpretations of procedural rules in order to accomplish jus- tice as he has seen it in particular cases, often with the goal of * Professor of Law, Fordham University School of Law. Thank you to Evan Piercey for excellent research assistance. Thank you to the participants at the Clifford Symposium at DePaul University College of Law and the Faculty Scholarship Retreat at Fordham University Law School for helpful comments and suggestions. And thank you to Judge Weinstein for an extraordinary career on the bench, for justice delivered in countless disputes, and for enriching the dialogue of proceduralists of every stripe. 1. SeeJEFFREY B. MORRIS,LEADERSHIPONTHE FEDERAL BENCH: THE CRAFTAND ACTIV- ISMOF JACK WEINSTEIN 46 (2011). Columbia originally hired Judge Weinstein to teach corpo- rate law, criminal law, and accounting, but within two years, he took over Jerome Michael’s courses in evidence and procedure when Michael passed away. Id. Judge Weinstein continued to teach civil procedure and evidence at Columbia for over thirty years. Id. 2. See MAURICE ROSENBERG & JACK WEINSTEIN, ELEMENTS OF CIVIL PROCEDURE: CASES AND MATERIALS (1962); see alsoJACK B. WEINSTEINETAL., MANUAL: CPLR (1967). 3. Judge Weinstein has used the term proceduralist more in the first sense than the second, drawing the distinction explicitly at a civil procedure conference: By “proceduralists” I do not mean a breed of narrow-minded legal militarists com- mitted to notions of perfect procedure at odds with social needs . . . . Rather, I mean to embrace thinkers of diverse backgrounds and professional stations in the proceduralist community, just as this conference includes representatives of faculty, bench and bar, with widely disparate expertise and viewpoints. Jack B. Weinstein, After Fifty Years of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure: Are the Barriers to Justice Being Raised?, 137 U. PA. L. REV. 1901, 1905 n.10 (1989) (citation omitted). 4. MORRIS,supra note 1, at 113. 393 394 DEPAUL LAW REVIEW [Vol.64:393 achieving comprehensive resolutions of large multiparty disputes. And he has done so unabashedly, explaining why standard applica- tions of procedural rules fail to accomplish justice. Maybe it takes a proceduralist to be an antiproceduralist. Maybe it is only natural that the most unabashed rule breaker should be the one who best under- stands the rules.5 Judge Weinstein, steeped in procedure, puts sub- stantive justice first. Indeed, I have never known a judge less inclined to let procedural niceties stand in the way of substantive justice. I say this, however, as a fan of procedural niceties. While I have always admired Judge Weinstein’s commitment to justice and his crea- tivity in finding comprehensive solutions to complex disputes, I want to say a word on behalf of procedural regularity. Even when rules interfere with accomplishing justice as a judge sees it in a particular dispute—perhaps especially when individualist-oriented procedural doctrines conflict with a holistic approach to substantive justice in a mass setting—procedural constraints serve important functions both separately and jointly. There is something undeniably appealing about insisting that justice take precedence over procedural regularity. This is the allure of antiproceduralism: that it eschews “technicalities” in favor of substantive justice. But technicalities are in the eye of the beholder, and in each instance it is worth asking what is lost when a judge steers around procedural constraints. Judge Weinstein tends to approach multiparty disputes holistically. That is, he often sees mass disputes in terms of liabilities of groups of defendants and remedies for groups of plaintiffs. To Judge Weinstein, understanding the claims of individual claimants or the liability of par- ticular defendants is necessary but not sufficient. A mass dispute, to him, is more than the sum of numerous individual claims. The Agent Orange litigation, the tobacco litigation, the asbestos litigation, the Zyprexa litigation—these are not mere aggregations of individual claims; they are mass disputes that demand resolution on a mass scale. Existing rules of procedure and ethics provide tools for resolving mass disputes, but these tools can be clumsy and incomplete. For a judge committed to efficient and comprehensive aggregate dispute resolu- tion, doctrines that limit forum selection and rules that constrict join- der get in the way. Because these rules embrace certain values that stand in tension to holism, such as territorial limits on judicial power and protection of individual autonomy, a judge committed to holistic 5. See generally Stephen B. Burbank, The Courtroom as Classroom: Independence, Imagina- tion and Ideology in the Work of Jack Weinstein, 97 COLUM. L. REV. 1971 (1997) (connecting Judge Weinstein’s work as a law professor to his behavior as a judge). 2015] THE ALLURE OF ANTIPROCEDURALISM 395 dispute resolution bumps up against rules of personal jurisdiction6 and joinder7 that hamper a judge’s ability to pull all related claims into a single forum or into a single lawsuit, and other rules that constrain the power of lawyers or judges to drive adherence to comprehensive settlements.8 This Article will offer several examples from Judge Weinstein’s ex- tensive catalogue of mass litigation to sketch out what it means to describe him as an antiproceduralist. First, it will look at Judge Wein- stein’s personal jurisdiction ruling in the DES litigation. Second, it will look at his ruling on permissive joinder of parties in the blasting caps litigation. Third, it will turn to class actions under Rule 23(b)(1)(B), looking at Judge Weinstein’s class certification ruling in the Simon II tobacco litigation, and class actions under Rule 23(b)(3), looking at his class certification ruling in the light cigarettes litigation. All of these examples involve complex multiclaimant disputes, but they touch a variety of topics stretching from start to finish of a typical civil procedure syllabus. II. PERSONAL JURISDICTION Precedent is here only a slight inhibitant against rational decision- making. —Judge Jack Weinstein9 In Ashley v. Abbott Laboratories,10 Judge Weinstein rejected two defendants’ motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, de- spite their lack of minimum contacts with New York. In doing so, he did not pretend to follow the standard analysis for personal jurisdic- tion as laid down by the Supreme Court in International Shoe Co. v. 6. See, e.g., FED. R. CIV. P. 4(k) (delineating territorial limits of effective service in federal court); Daimler AG v. Bauman, 134 S. Ct. 746 (2014) (addressing due process limits on general jurisdiction); Walden v. Fiore, 134 S. Ct. 1115 (2014) (addressing due process limits on specific jurisdiction). 7. See, e.g., FED. R. CIV. P. 20 (permissive joinder of parties); FED. R. CIV. P. 23 (class ac- tions); Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 131 S. Ct. 2541 (2011) (emphasizing limits on mandatory class actions, and requiring that movants establish each of the class certification requirements); Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591 (1997) (requiring settlement class actions to meet the requirements for class certification, and addressing certain problems with class certification in mass tort litigation). 8. See, e.g.,FED. R. CIV. P. 23(e) (imposing constraints on class settlements); MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT r. 1.8(g) (2014) (permitting aggregate settlement only with informed con- sent of the clients). 9. Ashley v. Abbott Labs. (In re DES Cases), 789 F. Supp. 552, 571 (E.D.N.Y. 1992), appeal dismissed sub nom. Ashley v. Boehringer Ingelham Pharm. (In re DES Litig.), 7 F.3d 20 (2d Cir. 1993). 10. 789 F. Supp. 552. 396 DEPAUL LAW REVIEW [Vol.64:393 Washington11 and subsequent cases. Rather, in classic Weinstein fash- ion, he embraced the need for a more flexible approach in order to accomplish justice holistically. “This diversity case,” he wrote, “presents a classic illustration of why traditional limits on personal jurisdiction must be modified for mass torts.”12 His opinion endeav- ored to describe the standard doctrine’s “limitations in cases such as the one before the court, and its capacity to be modified to the needs of the present litigation and mass torts generally.”13 The plaintiffs sued the manufacturers of diethylstilbestrol (DES), claiming that the drug caused adenocarcinoma in some of the daugh- ters of those who took the drug.14 DES plaintiffs faced problems es- tablishing causation under standard tort doctrine because DES pills were sold generically, and thus it was often impossible to determine which manufacturer’s product had been ingested by any particular plaintiff’s mother.15 Several courts addressed this problem by adopt- ing a market share liability approach, under which the plaintiffs could recover from a large number of defendants in proportion to those de- fendants’ share of the DES market.16 But even if the plaintiffs could overcome the causation problem as a matter of tort law based on com- mon law modifications crafted by state courts, they faced an addi- tional hurdle—personal jurisdiction. If the plaintiffs sought to recover from numerous defendants on a market share basis in a particular fo- rum, what if not all of those defendants fell within the jurisdictional reach of the court? In the Ashley case before Judge Weinstein, a group of plaintiffs as- serted claims against a large number of DES manufacturers in the Eastern District of New York.17 Two defendants moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.18 One of these defendants, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc., was alleged to be liable for the torts of Stayner Corporation, with which it had merged.19 Boehringer never produced or sold DES; the claim against Boehringer arose en- tirely out of Stayner’s conduct.20 Stayner sold DES elsewhere but not in New York, and according to Judge Weinstein’s account for pur- 11. 326 U.S. 310 (1945). 12. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 557. 13. Id. at 560. 14. Id. at 557–58. 15. Id. at 558–59. 16. Hymowitz v. Eli Lilly & Co., 539 N.E.2d 1069, 1071–72 (N.Y. 1989); Sindell v. Abbott Labs., 607 P.2d 924, 937–38 (Cal. 1980). 17. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 559. 18. Id. 19. Id. 20. Id. 2015] THE ALLURE OF ANTIPROCEDURALISM 397 poses of the jurisdictional motion, Stayner conducted no business in New York.21 The other objecting defendant, Boyle & Co., was a closely held California corporation that sold DES in California and elsewhere but not in New York, and like Stayner, never did business in New York.22 A straightforward personal jurisdiction analysis would lead a court to dismiss the claims against both of these defendants for lack of in personam jurisdiction. Under Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which instructs federal district courts on the territorial lim- its of effective service of process, the federal court for the Eastern District of New York must look to whether a New York state court would have personal jurisdiction.23 New York’s long-arm statute24 did not establish jurisdiction over the defendants, at least not on any in- terpretation the New York courts had given it. And even if it had, the assertion of jurisdiction would violate the defendants’ due process rights under the analysis of specific jurisdiction and general jurisdic- tion adopted by the Supreme Court. The plaintiffs’ claims against Bo- ehringer and Boyle did not arise out of those defendants’ contacts with New York, so specific jurisdiction could not be established.25 And neither Boehringer nor Boyle had substantial enough contacts with New York to permit general jurisdiction.26 Particularly with re- gard to Boyle, it was hard to see any basis for personal jurisdiction under a traditional statutory and constitutional analysis, as Boyle 21. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 559. 22. Id. 23. FED. R. CIV. P. 4(k)(1)(A) (“Serving a summons or filing a waiver of service establishes personal jurisdiction over a defendant . . . who is subject to the jurisdiction of a court of general jurisdiction in the state where the district court is located . . . .”); see also Daimler AG v. Bauman, 134 S. Ct. 746 (2014); Walden v. Fiore, 134 S. Ct. 1115 (2014). Certain Rule 4 excep- tions grant federal courts a wider reach than state courts, such as the hundred-mile extension for third-party claims and for compulsory party joinder, FED. R. CIV. P. 4(k)(1)(B)–(C), or nation- wide service for claims under certain federal statutes, FED. R. CIV. P. 4(k)(2), but none of these federal court jurisdictional extensions applied in the Ashley case. 24. N.Y. C.P.L.R. §§301, 302. 25. See, e.g., World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 444 U.S. 286 (1980). 26. At the time of the Ashley decision, the guiding Supreme Court cases on general jurisdic- tion were Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co., 342 U.S. 437 (1952), and Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall, 466 U.S. 408 (1984), which made it reasonably clear that mere sales or other business would not establish general jurisdiction over a corporation. But the contours of general jurisdiction over corporations outside of the state of incorporation or head- quarters were still somewhat unclear, making it possible for Judge Weinstein to conclude that Boehringer was amenable to general jurisdiction because it was “doing business” in New York. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 591–92 (citing Helicopteros, 466 U.S. at 414). Since that time, Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v. Brown, 131 S. Ct. 2846 (2011), and Daimler AG v. Bauman, 134 S. Ct. 746 (2014), have made the “home state” test for general jurisdiction substantially clearer. 398 DEPAUL LAW REVIEW [Vol.64:393 “presented evidence indicating that . . . it [had] no ‘contacts’ with New York in the traditional sense.”27 Nonetheless, Judge Weinstein held that the court had personal juris- diction over Boehringer and Boyle. He pointed to the need for crea- tive solutions to the challenges presented by mass torts, and he described the features of mass torts that “conspire to hinder efficient judicial disposition.”28 With the challenges of mass tort litigation in mind, he turned to the New York long-arm statute and the constitu- tional analysis. As to the New York statute, Judge Weinstein ac- knowledged that no New York precedent had upheld personal jurisdiction under such circumstances, but he emphasized that the DES litigation “is not a traditional tort case,” and that the Hymowitz decision on market share liability “is the New York courts’ response to what would otherwise be the intractable nature of the DES mass tort.”29 Because DES presented a uniquely challenging tort case, Judge Weinstein treated precedent as less constraining: “Existing case law on section 302(a)(3)(ii) thus offers no direct guidance on the ap- plication of the ‘reasonable expectation’ element to mass DES torts; precedent is here only a slight inhibitant against rational decisionmak- ing.”30 Judge Weinstein thus treated New York law as “favoring a ju- risdictional reach consistent with the national market share rationale and the adoption of several liability.”31 Even if a particular DES man- ufacturer operated only locally in a market outside of New York, Judge Weinstein found that all DES manufacturers had a reasonable expectation of affecting New York because they “were competing to carve out local spheres of influence within the national DES market” and “the existence of the local markets depended upon the creation of a national DES market.”32 Because there was a “true national mar- ket” in DES, “[s]ales in any part of the national market had a neces- sary impact on every other part.”33 Thus, Judge Weinstein found that all DES manufacturers in the United States could be brought within the reach of the New York long-arm statute even if they did not sell products in New York or have any other contact with New York. Turning to the question of whether such an assertion of jurisdiction by New York would violate due process, Judge Weinstein adopted an 27. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 593. 28. Id. at 562. 29. Id. at 571. 30. Id; see also id. at 575 (“The wooden application of inapt precedent will not effectively resolve these cases.”). 31. Id. at 572. 32. Id. 33. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 572. 2015] THE ALLURE OF ANTIPROCEDURALISM 399 expansive approach in order to deal with the problems of mass tort litigation. Supreme Court cases such as World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson34 and Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court35 had emphasized the need for contacts by defendants that were, at least in some sense, purposefully directed toward the forum state. In Ashley, Judge Weinstein put these problematic precedents aside on the ground that they failed to address the special problems of mass torts: In any event, neither Volkswagen nor Asahi, which both involved conventional product liability claims by individual plaintiffs, are controlling in DES mass torts brought under Hymowitz for the same reasons that the traditional New York tort cases interpreting the “reasonable expectation” element of C.P.L.R. 302(a)(3)(ii) are unhelpful in applying that statute to mass tort cases such as this one.36 In mass litigation, Judge Weinstein wrote, “the irrationality of the ter- ritorial nexus requirement is arguably most evident and the need for an improved approach most urgent.”37 According to Judge Weinstein, “[T]he difficulties raised by mass litigation and the present case war- rant a restatement of jurisdictional due process law that can function in this and other mass torts.”38 He proceeded to offer a new set of principles to guide jurisdictional analysis in mass torts, focusing on whether the forum state has an appreciable interest in the litigation and whether the defendant would be able to mount a defense in the forum state.39 Applying his new analytical framework to the DES case, he found that New York had an appreciable interest in the litiga- tion and that Boehringer and Boyle would be able to defend them- selves in New York; therefore, he rejected the defendants’ motions to dismiss.40 Judge Weinstein’s jurisdictional decision escaped appeal because most of the parties reached settlement and the plaintiffs declined to prosecute their claims against Boehringer. When Boehringer at- tempted to appeal the decision on personal jurisdiction, the Second Circuit ruled that Boehringer lacked standing to appeal because it did not suffer an adverse judgment.41 34. 444 U.S. 286 (1980). 35. 480 U.S. 102 (1987). 36. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 575. 37. Id. at 586. 38. Id. at 577. 39. Id. at 587. 40. Id. at 591–94. 41. Ashley v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharm. (In re DES Litig.), 7 F.3d 20, 23 (2d Cir. 1993). 400 DEPAUL LAW REVIEW [Vol.64:393 Judge Weinstein’s approach displayed a powerful but problematic procedural logic: Under New York tort law, as decided by the New York Court of Appeals in Hymowitz, DES manufacturers could be held liable, in proportion to their national market share, for their sale of a fungible dangerous product. To apportion liability fully under this market share approach, the court needed power over all of the manufacturers. Otherwise, not all of the manufacturers would share in the liability, which would mean either undercompensation of the plaintiffs or overliability of the remaining defendants. The defendants operated as part of a nationwide market for DES, and their liability would be based on nationwide market share; effectuation of such lia- bility, according to Judge Weinstein, required granting the court power to bind manufacturers nationwide even if they lacked any di- rect contacts with New York. As Judge Weinstein put it, “[T]he tech- nology, marketing, sociology, and possible ill effects of DES knew no state boundaries. The national nature of the resulting toxic tort litiga- tion must be reflected in the law’s treatment of jurisdictional issues.”42 The problem with this logic is that it elevates New York tort law above constitutional and statutory constraints on the territorial power of the court. If constraints on personal jurisdiction mean anything, they must mean that sometimes a court will be unable to impose lia- bility on potentially responsible parties. The constraints of personal jurisdiction cause fewer problems in settings where a plaintiff can sim- ply sue the defendant in a different forum; they cause greater problems in settings such as the DES litigation, where jurisdictional limits may render it impossible for any single court to bind all of the potentially liable parties, and where individual adjudications in sepa- rate courts would reduce the efficiency and substantive coherence of the proceedings. But personal jurisdiction reflects something more than an allocation of judicial responsibility; it reflects a due process protection against the judicial power of an unrelated sovereign. If the state lacks power to bind a particular out-of-state defendant because of that party’s lack of contact, the forum state cannot overcome that lack of power by a modification of its doctrine of tort causation, even in the name of resolving a complex multiparty dispute.43 [At oral argument,] Boehringer stated that all the other defendant DES manufacturers settled with plaintiffs, but that Boehringer refused to do so. Trial then commenced against Boehringer, but the plaintiffs declined to present any evidence. The District Court then orally dismissed the complaint as to Boehringer for want of prosecution. Id. 42. Ashley, 789 F. Supp. at 558. 43. SeeBoaz v. Boyle & Co., 46 Cal. Rptr. 2d 888, 899–901 (Ct. App. 1995). 2015] THE ALLURE OF ANTIPROCEDURALISM 401 Judge Weinstein’s interpretation of New York’s long-arm statute to enable full implementation of market share liability privileged a com- mon law causation decision over a statutory constraint on judicial power. Hymowitz was a matter of common law development of New York tort law. As a matter of separation of powers and deference to state legislatures, one should ask whether a state high court’s altera- tion of the state’s common law justifies a reinterpretation of the state’s jurisdictional statutes to mesh with the common law shift, absent legis- lative action. The more important question, however, concerns Judge Weinstein’s interpretation of federal due process constraints on the power of New York courts. Unless the courts were to abandon due process con- straints on territorial jurisdiction (and Judge Weinstein does not pur- port to go this far, despite frank statements on the obsolescence of Pennoyer),44 the assertion of personal jurisdiction over these defend- ants is troubling. In the absence of minimum contacts with New York, a New York court’s assertion of power over the defendants intrudes on the defendants’ due process right to be free from the adjudicative power of an unrelated sovereign.45 One might respond that territorial nexus-based limits on judicial power no longer make sense in an era of interstate and international activity, that such limits are unnecessary in light of modern communi- cation and transportation, and that the International Shoe line of cases requires significant modification in the context of modern mass dis- putes. The question, at this point, would be how freely a federal dis- trict judge ought to depart from clear, recent Supreme Court precedent. Finally, one might respond that this is not really a question of con- straints on the power of New York state courts; Judge Weinstein is a federal judge and Ashley was a federal court case. As a matter of con- stitutional limits on territorial power, the authority of the United The problem with the approach suggested by In re DES Cases is more fundamental. The trial judge was critical of the territorial nexus approach to jurisdiction issues, and sought to sever “territorial notions” from more general concerns underlying the bases for assertion of jurisdiction. Whatever might be said of that approach in philosophical terms, it runs counter to United States Supreme Court decisions about the assertion of personal jurisdiction over nonresidents. Id.at 900 (citation omitted). 44. Id. at 579 (discussing Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U.S. 714 (1877), and stating that “[f]rom 1877 forward, the courts were forced to expend considerable effort to sustain Pennoyer in the face of historical developments that had rendered its holding obsolete”); see also id. at 580 (“From its inception,Pennoyer was awkward in its application.”). 45. See Daimler AG v. Bauman, 134 S. Ct. 746 (2014); see also Walden v. Fiore, 134 S. Ct. 1115 (2014); World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 444 U.S. 286 (1980).

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